Abstract

Assessment of artificial heart valves is a classic example of pitfalls in Doppler and color flow echocardiography. These limitations should be analyzed in the context of the most common clinical conditions associated with prosthetic valve dysfunction, that is, assessment of stenosis, regurgitation, endocarditis, and source of emboli. Estimation of the mean transvalvular gradient in addition to valve areas may avoid potential problems of over- or underestimation of stenotic lesions. The combination of acoustic attenuation, acoustic shadowing, and jet(s) eccentricity makes accurate grading of prosthetic regurgitation difficult and often frustrating. Reverberations and side lobe are frequent artifacts that decrease the ability of two-dimensional echocardiography to identify endocarditis-induced lesions such as vegetations and abscesses, as well as potential sources of emboli such as thrombus and atrial septal abnormalities. Transesophageal echocardiography has provided a new window in the evaluation of prosthetic cardiac valve function. With this approach, high frequency, high resolution transducers greatly improve the quality of ultrasound and color flow Doppler images that result in a higher diagnostic yield. In patients with suspected mitral prosthesis malfunction, transesophageal echocardiography is the method of choice. Contrast study during the transesophageal examination increases the sensitivity to detect potential sources of emboli such as patent foramen ovale. The improvement in diagnostic accuracy may allow one to avoid further diagnostic tests and, in selected patients, it may facilitate optimal timing of a surgical intervention.

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